
Today Carmel-by-the-Sea is celebrated as one of America's most charming small towns — a coastal village of galleries, gardens, and storybook cottages, anchored by Serra's 1770 mission, Jeffers' hand-built tower, and a beach the color of bone china. Our Carmel designs gather that identity into wearable form: the village in the forest, the Tudor eaves, the cypress and the surf. Explore the collection and carry a little of Carmel's fairytale coast wherever you go.
The village's signature look arrived in 1924, when a self-taught builder named Hugh Comstock raised a tiny Tudor cottage called Hansel for his wife's handmade dolls, followed by Gretel and the Tuck Box — steep rolled eaves, irregular Carmel-stone chimneys, and casings carved straight from the Arthur Rackham fairytale books. The "Storybook" style spread cottage by cottage until the whole town read like an illustration. South along the headland stands Tor House and Hawk Tower, the stone home poet Robinson Jeffers built by hand between 1919 and 1924, hauling boulders up from the beach; in December 2024 it, too, was named a National Historic Landmark.
Why People Visit Carmel-by-the-Sea
- Relax on Carmel Beach, a broad crescent of pale sand backed by wind-flattened Monterey cypress and famous sunset silhouettes.
- Stretch farther south along Carmel River State Beach to where the Carmel River meets the Pacific — a quieter dog-friendly stretch with bird-watching at the lagoon.
- Explore Point Lobos State Natural Reserve, with granite coves, sea lions, otters, and easy trails above turquoise water.
- Find the Comstock storybook cottages — Hansel, Gretel, and the Tuck Box — on a self-guided fairytale walk through the village lanes.
- Tour the Carmel Mission Basilica (Mission San Carlos Borromeo), with its basilica, museum rooms, and gardens set within sandstone and adobe walls.
- Visit Tor House and Hawk Tower at Carmel Point, the hand-built stone home of poet Robinson Jeffers, open for docent-led tours.
- Browse Ocean Avenue's courtyards, galleries, and flower-lined passages, then walk Scenic Road along the cliffs above the surf.